Susana Nuccetelli is Professor of Philosophy at St.
Cloud State University, Minnesota. Her articles on Latin American
philosophy, ethics, epistemology, and philosophy of language have
appeared in Analysis, Metaphilosophy, Inquiry,
and other journals. She is editor of New Essays on Semantic
Externalism and Self-Knowledge (2003), co-editor of Themes
from G. E. Moore (2007) and Philosophy of Language: The
Central Topics (2008), and single author of Latin American
Thought: Philosophical Problems and Arguments (2002).

Ofelia Schutte is Professor of Philosophy at the
University of South Florida, Tampa. She is the author of
Cultural Identity and Social Liberation in Latin American
Thought (1993), Beyond Nihilism: Nietzsche without Masks
(1984), and numerous articles on feminist theory, Latin American
thought, and continental philosophy. A former Fulbright Senior
Research Fellow to Mexico, her work has appeared in Hypatia: A
Journal of Feminist Philosophy, Journal of Social
Philosophy, Philosophy Today, and The Philosophical
Forum, among other journals and edited collections.

OtávioBueno is Professor of Philosophy at
the University of Miami, Florida. His work in philosophy of
science, philosophy of mathematics and philosophy of logic has been
published in Noûs, Mind, Philosophy of
Science, Synthese, Journal of Philosophical
Logic, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science,
Erkenntnis, Studies in History and Philosophy of
Science, and Analysis, among other journals and
collections. He is a subject area co-editor in Latin American and
Iberian Philosophy for the Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy.

"It will no doubt serve as the field's standard for years to come."
(Hum Stud, 2011)

"A welcome addition to the growing body of literature on Latin
American philosophy. Highly recommended. Upper-level undergraduates
through researchers/faculty; general readers." (Choice, 1 March
2011)

"This outstanding work is a thorough presentation of the main
topics of Latin American Philosophy from colonial times to the
present. The authors adeptly combine discussions of historical
aspects with issues of contemporary importance, and also describe
developments in the philosophical disciplines in Latin America.
Beyond its usefulness for the study of philosophy, the book has
much to offer anyone interested in Latin American history,
literature, or political and social ideas."
—J.C. Torchia Estrada, Philosophy Contributing Editor,
Handbook of Latin American Studies

"The most comprehensive guide to Latin American philosophy to
date. It covers an astonishing range of issues from pre-Columbian
times to the present in highly informative essays. This is a work
destined to last."
—Iván Jaksic, Stanford University

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